Canadian products that changed the world, from batteries to the Blackberry
Daniel Coughlin
09 September 2024
Ingenious inventions from the Great White North
Pierre Perrin/Sygma via Getty Images
Kayak (up to 5,000 years ago)
Sébastien Lecocq/Alamy Stock Photo
Toboggan (many centuries ago)
BiblioArchives/LibraryArchives/Flickr CC
Sunglasses (many centuries ago)
Julian Idrobo/Wikmedia Commons [CC BY-SA 2.0]
Petroleum jelly (many centuries ago)
Picture Partners/Alamy Stock Photo
Parka (many centuries ago)
Kenneth Gordon Chipman/Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 4.0]
Chewing gum (many centuries ago)
Jody/Shutterstock
Steam fog horn (1853/1854)
kenny1/Shutterstock
Light bulb (1874)
Marzolino/Shutterstock
Telephone (1876)
Moffett Studio/Wikimedia Commons [Public Domain]
Electric oven (1882)
Courtesy Canada Science and Technology Museums Corporation
Peanut butter (1884)
M. G. Edson/Wikimedia Commons [Public Domain]
Caulking gun (1894)
Bilanol/Shutterstock
Bi-pin connector (1894)
Artography/Shutterstock
Egg carton (1911)
VGV Media/Shutterstock
Zipper (1914)
Gideon Sundbäck/Wikimedia Commons [Public Domain]
Insulin (1921)
Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Snowmobile (1922)
Library and Archives Canada/Wikimedia Commons [Public Domain]
Snow blower (1925)
Archives de la Ville de Montréal/Wikimedia Commons [Public Domain]
Walkie-talkie (1937)
Bob Orsillo/Shutterstock
Paint roller (1940)
Rasta777/Shutterstock
G-suit (1941)
Courtesy University of Toronto Archives
Pager (1949)
Kb7uxe/Wikimedia Commons [Public Domain]
Garbage bag (1950s)
UPPICHAYA/Shutterstock
Electric wheelchair (1953)
Courtesy University of Toronto Archives
Alkaline battery (1954)
Dawid S Swierczek/Shutterstock
IMAX (1968)
Kristoffer Tripplaar/Alamy Stock Photo
Electric prosthetic hand (1971)
Krysja/Shutterstock
Trivial Pursuit (1979)
Pierre Perrin/Sygma via Getty Images
BlackBerry (1999)
dpa picture alliance archive/Alamy Stock Photo
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